CPI(ML) HOME Vol.9, No. 52 26 DEC 06 - 01 Jan 07

The Weekly News Bulletin of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist)(Liberation)

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In this Issue

2007: A Time to Reclaim Our Country, Our History, Our Freedom, Our Rights

The year 2007 marks the 150th anniversary of India’s First War of Independence. It is also the centenary year of Bhagat Singh’s birth, and the fortieth anniversary of the Naxalbari rebellion. The Central Committee of the CPI(ML) has called for celebrating the confluence of these three great anniversaries with a countrywide “Our Country, Our History – Our Freedom, Our Rights” campaign. A big Inquilab rally has been planned in Delhi on 23 March, the day Bhagat Singh and his comrades Sukhdev and Rajguru embraced martyrdom seventy-six years ago with the clarion call “Inquilab Zindabad! Samrajyavad Murdabad!” (Long Live Revolution! Down with Imperialism!). The campaign will be aimed at rekindling this spirit of history in the midst of the ongoing popular struggles of the present and for this purpose the campaign will highlight a ten-point people’s charter comprising the key demands of these struggles.
Why is it important for us to celebrate this history? The current Indian ruling elite is afraid of, and at any rate uncomfortable with, this history and this is why they want us to forget this history or know it only in a distorted and mutilated manner. So celebrating this history is not just remembering the past but waging a struggle against the present-day rulers who have a different historical inheritance and who want our history to remain subordinated to their history.
British colonialists had dubbed 1857 as a case of ‘sepoy mutiny’ when fanatic Indian soldiers driven by blind religious passion and hatred had attacked their European officers and other British civilians. They would like us to believe that the mutineers had no sense of what they were doing and were just a bunch of killers who had to be and were brought under control by the superior military and ‘civilisational’ might of British colonialism. Western historians today are also tempted to see 1857 as a case of ‘Islamic jehad’ against Christianity and Western civilisation. The official Indian history today does recognise 1857 as the First War of India’s Independence, but it does its best to try and suppress the distinguishing features – the militant anti-colonial spirit, the popular participation and the emerging national character – that made the war of 1857 so greatly remarkable.
The insurrection of 1857 had certainly been initiated by the soldiers from the barracks of Bengal, but in no time it had spread not only among armed regiments across the country but most importantly among peasants, small traders and other sections of the Indian people. It was not a revolt of a few disgruntled kings and feudal rulers – rather many kings and feudal rulers collaborated with the British and helped them put down the rebellion. It was not an attempt to restore Muslim rule in India, much less was it an Islamic jehad against Christianity. The majority of the soldiers and the peasants and traders backing them up were Hindus and it was they who got an old and reluctant Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mughal ruler, to provide a symbolic leadership to the revolt. And the revolt was characterised by its conscious and concrete expressions of unity between the two communities with the rebels defining themselves as ‘Hindus and Muslims of Hindustan. In fact, an integral aspect of the new strategy of control forged by the colonialists in response to 1857 was the deliberate fomenting of communal hostilities.    
The revolt did not succeed in its goal of overthrowing the British rulers, the mutineers obviously did not have the kind of organisation and preparation needed for that kind of victory, and the objective conditions too were not ripe enough. But the fact that they succeeded in holding on for nearly two years in different parts of the country clearly shows that the revolt was far from being just a sporadic or accidental outburst of mass anger. History tells us that the mutineers had their own committees which issued directives for the people, they had their own song which emphasised people’s unity and the goal of freeing the country from British plunder. The soldiers most of whom were essentially peasants in uniform struck a chord of ready resonance with the peasantry and this gave the whole revolt a powerful peasant content and ensured popular participation on a significant scale. Even militarily the war of 1857 moved on from regular warfare to guerrilla warfare with the British Army holding in large parts of the country “nothing but the towns” while the insurgent armies gradually dissolved into “smaller bodies of from two to six or eight thousand men, acting to a certain degree, independently of each other, but always ready to unite for a short expedition against any British detachment” (Frederick Engels, July 6, 1858). 1857 thus went much farther than being merely a reaction of pre-modern India to British occupation and plunder, it gave us the first glimpse of a modern India in its embryonic stage.
Let us not forget that we are here talking about a period that was indeed quite early for the kind of powerful national liberation struggles that eventually ended the colonial era in the 20th century or the revolutionary battles of the working people that the world saw in the form of the Paris Commune in 1871, or the workers’ and peasants’ soviets that appeared in the course of the Russian Revolution in February-November 1917.  For colonial India in the mid-19th century, the revolt of 1857 had indeed reached an extraordinary height and given the British rulers their first major shock. Benjamin Disraeli who went on to become Prime Minister of Britain in the 1870s told the British parliament on July 27, 1857 that what had been happening in India was far more than a military mutiny, it had all the signs of a national revolt prompting him to deliver a long speech on his “considerations on the decline of the Anglo-Indian Empire.”
The British rulers were quick to learn their lessons from the shock of 1857. The East India Company was abolished, changes were made in the mode and method of British rule in India, and in the form of the Indian National Congress the British developed a safety valve mechanism so that India did not explode ever again. From the high of armed insurrection, India had been brought down to the lowest political level of petitioning for petty relief and reforms. For sections of the Indian elite, political awakening may have its genesis in the art of petitioning taught by the British, but the great majority of the Indian people had already made a political beginning with the national revolt of 1857 and all the local revolts that preceded and followed it. In subsequent years, this difference between these two trajectories grew often into sharp contrasts between the revolutionary and reformist schools within the freedom movement.
The difference was not confined to the question of methods of movement, it pervaded the entire understanding of the vision of India, the definition of India’s national identity. While the insurgents of 1857 rose against the colonial plunder of India, the Congress essentially saw British colonialism as the harbinger of modernity in India. It saw the plunderer as nurturer and Manmohan Singh acknowledged as much during one of his recent speeches at Oxford University. The ideological predecessors and founders of the Sangh Parivar went one step further and they saw British occupation in terms of liberation of so-called Hindu India from centuries of perceived Islamic domination. This is why the RSS kept aloof from the entire quest for India’s independence. This umbilical cord of dependence, this craving for imperialist blessings, continues to define the Congress-BJP attitude to today’s American empire-builders, they cannot think of an Indian future beyond the strategic umbrella of American domination, let alone throwing up any kind of resistance or challenge to US imperialism’s campaign of global war and global plunder.
The insurgents of 1857 would never brook such bankruptcy that equated independence with a shameless surrender to and collaboration with imperialist powers. It would have never allowed communal division to determine the history, geography or politics of the country. Bhagat Singh and his comrades resurrected the spirit of 1857 and gave it a firm socialist, anti-imperialist orientation, completing the conceptual transition from Gadar to Inquilab (revolt to revolution). They visualised independence as a combination or convergence of political liberty and social emancipation and when they saw the dominant Congress leadership waver and betray on both scores, they warned us against the consequence of the bhure Angrez or the brown sahibs usurping power and monopolising the fruits of freedom for a few robbing the majority of their resources and rights. Today the brown sahibs in power are naturally mortally afraid of the memories of 1857 and the trail blazed by Bhagat Singh and his comrades. It is not surprising that a police official in Maharashtra should see even the act of selling the books of Bhagat Singh as a criminal offence and act of sedition.
Neither the British nor the Indian rulers could however ever destroy the spirit of 1857 or the legacy of Bhagat Singh. Following Gandhi’s withdrawal of the movement after the Chaurichaura incident, peasants have repeatedly organised and revolted under the communist banner. From Tebhaga in Bengal, Telengana in Andhra to Punnapra-Vayalar in Kerala, the history of India’s freedom movement was full of glorious instances of peasant power and militancy. The people also never forgot the military tradition of 1857 and just before the British left they were once again confronted with the great naval mutiny of Bombay and the heroic campaign of the Azad Hind Fauj or the Indian National Army. The tragic communal bloodbath and partition of 1947 and the consolidation of a pro-imperialist bourgeois-landlord rule in post-colonial India did mark a setback for the quest for real freedom and democracy, but powered by the relentless and determined struggles of the peasants and workers, the Indian people did not allow the rulers to dictate terms and kept up the revolutionary banner of anti-imperialist resistance and radical social transformation. Forty years ago, Naxalbari signified the most concentrated and courageous expression of this revolutionary quest in post-colonial India.
Like 1857, Naxalbari too did not succeed in winning ultimate victory in the revolutionary campaign it had unleashed, but the fire lit by Naxalbari has definitely turned into a new light for the Indian people to challenge the darkness in which the rulers want to drown the country. It was Naxalbari which taught us to look at the oppressed people not as victims but as fighters and heroes, and rediscover the history of the people by rejecting the history of the rulers.
Today when the rulers have teamed up with the US imperialists and are waging a desperate joint war on our resources and rights, it is surely time for us to rediscover our glorious history and rekindle the great spirit of people’s resistance against loot and oppression, injustice and imperialism, Let the imperialists and our rulers tremble before our history, we are here to reclaim our country and our history, secure our freedom and win all our rights. Let us welcome 2007 in all its glory.
Ten-Point Campaign Charter
The people’s charter to be highlighted in the course of the campaign will comprise the following major points:
(i) scrapping of SEZ policy and defence of peasants’ inalienable right to cultivable land;
(ii) stopping peasant suicides and starvation deaths (iii) strict implementation of NREGA, and its extension to the whole of the country on improved terms;
(iv) legal guarantee for right to education, right to work and right to health;
(v)   restoration of alienated tribal land and rehabilitation of all project-displaced people;
(vi) embargo on indiscriminate entry of foreign investment, especially in sectors like education and retail trade;
(vii) regularisation of unorganised workers and guaranteeing their basic rights;
(viii) end to violence and discrimination against dalits, adivasis, women and minorities and ensuring greater opportunities for all disadvantaged sections;
(ix) scrapping of black laws like Armed Forces Special Powers Act and end to state-sponsored violence against the people like Salwa Judum in Chhatisgarh;
(x)  scrapping of Indo-US nuclear deal and reversal of pro-US foreign policy. 

8th Memorial Day of Comrade VM Observed as Sankalp Diwas

Various units of the Party observed the 8th Memorial Day of Comrade Vinod Mishra as Sankalp Diwas and organised various programmes on the occasion. The day also marked the conclusion of the organisational campaign taken up after the Burdhaman Convention and various committees reviewed their performance through GBMs, cadre conventions, etc.
A cadre convention was held in Delhi where a review of the three-month's campaign was done. The convention was addressed by Party General Secretary Dipankar Bhattacharya where he called upon party members to work hard for expanding the mass base. A bigger mass base also guarantees the right orientation and inner party discipline, he said. The convention concluded that the Bardhaman convention has brought the important agenda of party building to the fore, and good results were obtained wherever leading comrades directly engaged themselves in the campaign. The mass initiatives have resulted in good enthusiasm among cadres and this will certainly lead to further expansion and strengthening of the Party. It was also concluded that emphasis must be given to mass political mobilisations, local/sector level struggles, area or branch level responsibilities and concrete ideological debates.
Tributes were paid to Comrade VM by garlanding his portrait at Bihar State office in Patna. An oath-taking ceremony was organised  in the afternoon for the newly inducted members at the city party office. Pledge taking was also held in Chitkohra, Patna East, Kankarbagh, Phulwari, Fatuha, Naubatpur, Maner, Bihta, Paliganj, Masaurhi, Dhararua  and Digha in Patna district. In Bhojpur, a district level cadre training camp was organised in Ara. This was addressed by the Editor of Lokyudh Brij Bihari Pandey. A photo exhibition was also held here which was inaugurated by Polit Bureau member Swadesh Bhattacharya. A cadre training camp was held at Jahanabad where In-charge of Central Education Department Ramjatan Sharma delivered his speech. In Dehri-on-Sone, Party's 8th District Conference was held on this day. Comrade Swadesh Bhattacharya was the Chief Guest of the Conference. Programmes were also held in Motihari, Begusarai, Nawada and all other districts of Bihar.
Public meetings, GBMs, cadre training camps, etc. were held throughout Jharkhand to commemorate VM's Memorial Day. Discussions on the Burdhaman documents were organised in Palamu, Garhwa, Letehar, and Jamshedpur. A cadre convention was held in Giridih. Block level GBMs were held in Dhanbad district. Mass meetings were organised in Bokaro, while cadre meets were held in Hazaribagh and Ranchi. A Sankalp Sabha was organised in Mohanpur of Devghar district.
A Sankalp meet was held in Jind town of Haryana where a pledge was taken to double the Party membership. A workshop was held in Jaipur on this occasion where new members were also inducted. Similar programmes were held in all the states from district to block levels.

AIALA National Council Meets in Gaya

The National Council of All India Agricultural Labour Association (AIALA) held its meeting in Gaya on December 20-21. The meeting decided to observe the day of martyrdom of Comrade Mahendra Singh, January 16, as a nationwide protest day against government’s attempts to undermine the issues of the poor and effigies of the fake/incomplete BPL list will be burnt at all district headquarters in the country. A memorandum will also be sent to the President to ask this intervention to protect the rights of the poor, with the demands of amendments in the concerned Acts, and to ensure the name of every agricultural worker into the BPL list as well as to ensure the right to food to every citizen.
The National Council concluded that the policies of liberalization have intensified attacks on the basic rights and livelihood of the people and issues of food security, employment and pro-people development have now attained more significance. Simultaneously, a resistance movement is also developing against these policies throughout the country. AIALA strives for intensifying such movements and, while strengthening and spreading its organization up to the far corners of the country, it will work towards unifying the struggles of agricultural lobourers with that of the peasants on a common platform to counter the adverse impact of liberalization, globalization and privatization in the agriculture sector.
While the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme has raised the aspirations of the rural poor and agri. workers nationwide, the governments’ recalcitrant approach of not properly implementing it at the grassroots remains a major hurdle. The National Council has decided to go for bigger mobilizations at state levels to press for its implementation as well as to intensify the struggle at the grassroots. The NREGA may play an important role in raising and developing the class consciousness of agrarian workers and hence expansion of the organization and politicization of the issue are major aspects of this struggle. The issues like BPL, PDS, and misappropriation of development funds, etc. are an integral part of this campaign and must be raised simultaneously.
AIALA will demand the guarantee of homestead land for every agricultural worker family, redistribution of ceiling surplus land, to stop the displacement of tribals in the name of development projects, withdrawal of the policy of SEZs causing displacement of crores of peasants, and will press the government for a comprehensive and progressive land reforms agenda in favour of the peasants and the rural poor.
The National Council resolved to work hard to make the forthcoming Inquilab Rally organized by the CPI(ML) in Delhi on 23 March, the Martyrdom Day of Shaheed-e-Azam Bhagat Singh, as well as the rally to be held in Kolkata in May 25, on the Naxalbari Day, a grand success. The Council passed a resolution condemning the kidnapping of AIALA National Councillor form Karbi Anglong district of Assam, Comrade Langtuk Phangcho, by UPDS, an armed outfit, which is under ceasefire agreement with the central govt. and demanded from the government his safe release immediately.

Movement Continues in Singur

CPI(ML) WB State Committee has demanded Judicial inquiry into the gruesome murder of Tapasi Malik, an activist of Singur Movement. The Party held a three-day sit-in-demonstration in front of the office of the Hooghly District Magistrate from 21- 23 December.  Earlier on 19 December, a militant demonstration was organised in front of the Hooghly Police Superintendent’s office.  The three-day sit-in was jointly organised by CPI(ML) Liberation and CPI(ML)-Kanu Sanyal. The demands of immediate withdrawal of section 144 from Singur and restoration of democracy and normalcy in the state, the forceful acquisition of arable lands and judicial probe into the incident of rape and murder were raised. It is to be noted that Tapasi Malik, an activist of the Singur Movement residing at Bajemali was murdered brutally on 18 December, near fencing of the acquired land of the proposed Tata Motors. The ruling LF Govt. at once tried to suppress the incident but facing all-out protests from each corner of sensible circles compelled it to institute a CBI inquiry into the incident. The programme began by paying homage to Rajkumar Bhul and Tapasi Malik observing 2 minutes silence.  State Secretary Kartick pal, Kalyan Goswami, SCM, CPI (ML) L, Partha Ghosh, SCM CPI (ML) L and Hooghly district Secretary Prabir Halder were present in the inaugural programme.  Mahasweta Devi and M.M. Harun, president of progressive intellectual and Journalist Association of Hooghly District expressed their solidarity with the protesters. Students from JNU, Jamia Milia University and Delhi University, led by JNUSU GS Sandip Singh, also participated and delivered speeches in the sit-in-demonstration.  The students' team also visited Singur for an on the spot assessment of the situation.

Edited, published and printed by S. Bhattacharya for CPI(ML) Liberation from U-90, Shakarpur, Delhi-92; printed at Bol Publication, R-18/2, Ramesh Park, Laxmi Nagar, Delhi-92; Phone:22521067; fax: 22518248, e-mail: mlupdate@cpiml.org, website: www.cpiml.org

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